释义 |
‖ ligula|ˈlɪgjʊlə| [L. ligula strap, spoon, by-form of lingula, f. lingua tongue.] 1. A narrow tongue-like strip or fillet. a. Bot. A narrow strap-shaped part in a plant, as the ‘limb’ of a ray floret in composite flowers, a projection from the top of a leaf-sheath in grasses, ‘an appendage at the base of some forms of Corona’ (Henslow 1856). b. Ent. (a) The ‘tongue’ of Crustaceans, Arachnids, and Insects, being a horny, membranous, or fleshy anterior part of the labium. (b) A tongue-like process on the elytra of certain aquatic beetles (Cent. Dict.). c. Anat. ‘A thin lamina occupying the angle between the cerebellum and the restiform body’ (Syd. Soc. Lex. 1888). a.1760J. Lee Introd. Bot. i. xix. (1765) 50 Ligula, a narrow Tongue, or Fillet. 1845Lindley Sch. Bot. i. (1858) 10 [In grasses] there is often a thin membrane called a ligula, at the upper end of the sheath. 1876Harley Mat. Med. (ed. 6) 371 Narrow leaves, with a long slit sheath and stipules adherent, forming a membranous ligula. 1882Vines Sachs' Bot. 392 Lycopodiaceæ... The leaves have no ligula. b.1826Kirby & Sp. Entomol. III. 363 Ligula, a capillary instrument between the lancets; probably representing the tongue of the perfect mouth. 1828Stark Elem. Nat. Hist. II. 218 The labium..is formed of two parts; one inferior..is the chin (mentum), the other membranous [etc.]..is termed ligula. 1834McMurtrie Cuvier's Anim. Kingd. 424 Their antennæ are always geniculate, and the ligula is small, rounded and concave, or cochleariform. c.1848Quain's Anat. (ed. 5) II. 724 The diverging posterior pyramids and restiform bodies surmounted along their margin by a band of nervous substance called the ligula. 2. A genus of cestoid worms, typical of the family Ligulidæ; a worm of this genus.
1840E. Blyth, etc. Cuvier's Anim. Kingd. (1849) 649 The fourth Family of the Parenchymata—the Cestoidea—consists of only a single genus,—Ligula. These are the simplest in their organization of all the Entozoa. 1876Beneden's Anim. Parasites Introd., When Rudolphi spoke of the ligulæ of fishes which could continue to live in birds. 3. A genus of molluscs (Cent. Dict.).
1839Sowerby Conch. Manual 56. |